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Effects of late growing-season and late dormant-season prescribed fire on herbaceous vegetation in restored pine-grassland communities
Authors:Jeffrey C Sparks  Ronald E Masters  David M Engle  Michael W Palmer  George A Bukenhofer
Abstract:Abstract. We compared the effects of late dormant-season and late growing-season prescribed fires on herbaceous species in restored shortleaf pine- (Pinus echinata) grassland communities in the Ouachita Highlands of western Arkansas. Herbaceous species richness, diversity, and total forb and legume abundance increased following fire. Late growing-season burns reduced distribution and abundance of panicums (primarily Panicum boscii, P. dichotomum, and P. linearifolium) while late dormant-season burns increased Panicum distribution and abundance. Density of legumes (such as Stylosanthes biflora) increased following frequent or annual dormant-season fires. However, season of fire influenced the distribution and abundance of fewer than 10 % of the species. Fire plays an essential role in pine-grassland communities by creating and maintaining open canopy conditions that perpetuate understory herbaceous plant communities.
Keywords:Arkansas  Fire ecology  Fire frequency  Fire season  Ouachita Mountains  Restoration ecology  Smith (1988)
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